46

I'm trying to use Go to log into a website and store the cookies for later use.

Could you give example code for posting a form, storing the cookies, and accessing another page using the cookies?

I think I might need to make a Client to store the cookies, by studying http://gotour.golang.org/src/pkg/net/http/client.go

package main

import ("net/http"
        "log"
        "net/url"
        )

func Login(user, password string) string {
        postUrl := "http://www.pge.com/eum/login"

        // Set up Login
        values := make(url.Values)
        values.Set("user", user)
        values.Set("password", password)

        // Submit form
        resp, err := http.PostForm(postUrl, values)
        if err != nil {
                log.Fatal(err)
        }
        defer resp.Body.Close()

        // How do I store cookies?
        return "Hello"
}

func ViewBill(url string, cookies) string {

//What do I put here?

}
2

5 Answers 5

90

Go 1.1 introduced a cookie jar implementation net/http/cookiejar.

import (
    "net/http"
    "net/http/cookiejar"
)

jar, err := cookiejar.New(nil)
if err != nil { 
  // error handling 
}

client := &http.Client{
    Jar: jar,
}
2
  • I am getting undefined: cookieJar using this Nov 6, 2020 at 5:24
  • @SalvatoreTimpani you forgot the import. It works well with it.
    – chmike
    Aug 10, 2021 at 8:11
24

First you'll need to implement the http.CookieJar interface. You can then pass this into the client you create and it will be used for requests made with the client. As a basic example:

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "net/http"
    "net/url"
    "io/ioutil"
    "sync"
)

type Jar struct {
    lk      sync.Mutex
    cookies map[string][]*http.Cookie
}

func NewJar() *Jar {
    jar := new(Jar)
    jar.cookies = make(map[string][]*http.Cookie)
    return jar
}

// SetCookies handles the receipt of the cookies in a reply for the
// given URL.  It may or may not choose to save the cookies, depending
// on the jar's policy and implementation.
func (jar *Jar) SetCookies(u *url.URL, cookies []*http.Cookie) {
    jar.lk.Lock()
    jar.cookies[u.Host] = cookies
    jar.lk.Unlock()
}

// Cookies returns the cookies to send in a request for the given URL.
// It is up to the implementation to honor the standard cookie use
// restrictions such as in RFC 6265.
func (jar *Jar) Cookies(u *url.URL) []*http.Cookie {
    return jar.cookies[u.Host]
}

func main() {
    jar := NewJar()
    client := http.Client{nil, nil, jar}

    resp, _ := client.PostForm("http://www.somesite.com/login", url.Values{
        "email": {"myemail"},
        "password": {"mypass"},
    })
    resp.Body.Close()

    resp, _ = client.Get("http://www.somesite.com/protected")

    b, _ := ioutil.ReadAll(resp.Body)
    resp.Body.Close()

    fmt.Println(string(b))
}
7
  • You should probably use a map keyed on hostname for the cookie jar. Oct 6, 2012 at 6:11
  • for a generic solution, agreed. This would be similar to how a browser works, but in the end it depends on implementation details.
    – dskinner
    Oct 6, 2012 at 6:24
  • 1
    "Implementations of CookieJar must be safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines." This is not concurrency safe. Not to mention the fact this sends your cookies to other hosts. I am going to downvote. Apr 12, 2013 at 23:41
  • strong points for something that might get a copy and paste. I updated the example with a lock/unlock on SetCookies but honestly not quite sure about Cookies. A new slice and copies of the cookies would assure thread safety but I'm unaware of how the method might be used internally. Since I can't really answer that, I'll just as well down vote my own answer so copy and pasters beware!
    – dskinner
    Apr 13, 2013 at 2:43
  • 1
    You're going to get a panic: runtime error: assignment to entry in nil map unless you set jar.cookies = map[string][]*http.Cookie{} somewhere ;-)
    – matt
    Jun 5, 2013 at 19:08
18

At the version 1.5 of Go, we can use http.NewRequest to make a post request with cookie.

package main                                                                                              
import "fmt"
import "net/http"
import "io/ioutil"
import "strings"

func main() {
    // Declare http client
    client := &http.Client{}

    // Declare post data
    PostData := strings.NewReader("useId=5&age=12")

    // Declare HTTP Method and Url
    req, err := http.NewRequest("POST", "http://localhost/", PostData)

    // Set cookie
    req.Header.Set("Cookie", "name=xxxx; count=x")
    resp, err := client.Do(req)
    // Read response
    data, err := ioutil.ReadAll(resp.Body)

    // error handle
    if err != nil {
        fmt.Printf("error = %s \n", err);
    }   

    // Print response
    fmt.Printf("Response = %s", string(data));
}           
7

net/http/cookiejar is a good option, but I like to know what cookies are actually required when making my requests. You can get the response cookies like this:

package main
import "net/http"

func main() {
   res, err := http.Get("https://stackoverflow.com")
   if err != nil {
      panic(err)
   }
   for _, c := range res.Cookies() {
      println(c.Name, c.Value)
   }
}

and you can add cookies like this:

package main
import "net/http"

func main() {
   req, err := http.NewRequest("GET", "https://stackoverflow.com", nil)
   if err != nil {
      panic(err)
   }
   req.AddCookie(&http.Cookie{Name: "west", Value: "left"})
}
-3

Another way of doing it. Works in Go 1.8.

    expiration := time.Now().Add(5 * time.Minute)
    cookie := http.Cookie{Name: "myCookie", Value: "Hello World", Expires: expiration}
    http.SetCookie(w, &cookie)
1
  • 5
    He asked for http client, not server.
    – ninhjs.dev
    Oct 21, 2018 at 4:00

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